It is a noun meaning "the way" or "the way after," particularly after conversation, in terms of rhetoric.
(Ramage, 10).
"It is difficult to name a true, universal method of rhetorical analysis."
Nicole Wang
Motion:
it is a verb meaning that the action needs no thought to move.
(Ramage, 13).
"One of the major distinctions between act and motion is that both inanimate and animate objects may experience motion"
Kaitlyn Sullivan
Motivation:
A term used to describe every person's "mixed bag of free will and determinism". Motivation results from an individual's quest to furfill a purpose, rather than because the individual "must" do it. While Motions are "caused" and pure Acts "express inner purposes," the symbolic acts comprising rhetoric are "motivated." Rhetoric A User's Guide (Ramage 15). Justin Taylor
Nature of Meaning:
This term refers to how words or images' meaning may or may not change over time. Rhetorical people can show that many meanings cannot be fixed as time goes on, the Oxford Dictionary reveals countless examples of this. Images also can change meaning over time, which may or may not spark a new kind of persuasion in the future. Ramage uses the U.S. Constitution as an example of how words can change meanings over time but also remain "fixed" or without amendment.
"At the heart of this debate lie different views of the nature of meaning"
Source page: Ramage, 23
Jason Frey
Method:
It is a noun meaning "the way" or "the way after," particularly after conversation, in terms of rhetoric.(Ramage, 10).
"It is difficult to name a true, universal method of rhetorical analysis."
Nicole Wang
Motion:
it is a verb meaning that the action needs no thought to move.(Ramage, 13).
"One of the major distinctions between act and motion is that both inanimate and animate objects may experience motion"
Kaitlyn Sullivan
Motivation:
A term used to describe every person's "mixed bag of free will and determinism". Motivation results from an individual's quest to furfill a purpose, rather than because the individual "must" do it. While Motions are "caused" and pure Acts "express inner purposes," the symbolic acts comprising rhetoric are "motivated." Rhetoric A User's Guide (Ramage 15). Justin Taylor
Nature of Meaning:
This term refers to how words or images' meaning may or may not change over time. Rhetorical people can show that many meanings cannot be fixed as time goes on, the Oxford Dictionary reveals countless examples of this. Images also can change meaning over time, which may or may not spark a new kind of persuasion in the future. Ramage uses the U.S. Constitution as an example of how words can change meanings over time but also remain "fixed" or without amendment.
"At the heart of this debate lie different views of the nature of meaning"
Source page: Ramage, 23
Jason Frey